Röder B, Rösler F, Heil M, Hennighausen E
Fachbereich Psychologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg.
Z Exp Angew Psychol. 1993;40(1):154-77.
Nineteen congenitally blind subjects (Ss), eleven Ss who went blind later in their life, and 42 control Ss with normal vision were tested in a tactile version of a "mental rotation" task. A specially constructed tactile display was used which enabled a rotation of the alphanumeric symbols in multiples of 60 degrees without any form distortion. Ss had to compare two successively presented symbols regarding whether the second was just a rotated version or also a mirror image of the first. Decision latencies and errors were recorded. Neither of dependent variables reveal any differences between the three groups of subjects. Moreover, the well known linear increase of decision latency as a function of angular disparity could also be observed with the tactile stimuli in all three groups. Both results are consistent with the assumption that mental rotation effects are neither linked to the visual modality nor to a manipulation of visual-analog representations. If the task is solved by so called analog processes then these seem to operate with non-visual spatial representations.
19名先天性失明受试者(被试)、11名晚年失明的被试以及42名视力正常的对照被试参与了一项触觉版“心理旋转”任务的测试。使用了一个特制的触觉显示器,它能够使字母数字符号以60度的倍数进行旋转且不会出现任何形状失真。被试必须比较两个相继呈现的符号,判断第二个符号是否只是第一个符号的旋转版本,还是也是其镜像。记录了决策潜伏期和错误情况。两个因变量均未显示出三组被试之间存在任何差异。此外,在所有三组中,随着角度差异的增加,决策潜伏期呈线性增加这一众所周知的现象,在触觉刺激下也能观察到。这两个结果都与以下假设一致,即心理旋转效应既不与视觉模态相关,也不与视觉模拟表征的操作相关。如果该任务是通过所谓的模拟过程解决的,那么这些过程似乎是通过非视觉空间表征来运作的。